PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

IUPUI physicist collaborates in new study of the cell's 'shredder'

2013-10-25
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Cindy Fox Aisen
caisen@iupui.edu
317-843-2276
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis School of Science
IUPUI physicist collaborates in new study of the cell's 'shredder'

INDIANAPOLIS -- Steve Pressé, Ph.D., assistant professor of physics in the School of Science at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, collaborates as the theorist of a new University of California-Berkeley study that provides novel insight into how proteins function in cells.

This collaborative study focuses on a bacterial ClpXP protease, a large protein complex resembling similar complexes in human cells. "It has a function within the cell similar to that of the shredder in an office," Pressé says. Proteins enter the molecular machine to be chopped up. Just as our office shredders function differently depending on what type of media is inserted for destruction (paper, a CD or a plastic card), this cellular shredder is just as flexible. This study finds that ClpXP operates differently for different segments of a single protein.

"This cellular level shredder is different from other molecular motors we know about in biology. It operates at a constant RPM [revolutions per minute] but has different gears," said Pressé. "The molecular motor revolves in an orderly way but the amount of protein it shreds differs over one revolution displaying an evolutionary strategy for dealing with complicated material it needs to shred."

ClpXP is involved in DNA damage repair, gene expression and protein quality control.

"The ClpXP protease functions as a motor with constant "rpm" but different "gears"" is published in the Oct. 24 issue of the journal Cell.



INFORMATION:

Authors are Maya Sen, Rodrigo A. Maillard, Kristofor Nyquist, Piere Rodriguez-Aliaga, Steve Pressé, Andreas Martin, and Carlos Bustamante. All authors other than Pressé are affiliated with UC Berkeley. Bustamante is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. The work was supported in part by the Searle Scholars Program (A.M.), NIH grant R01-GM094497-01A1 (A.M.), NIH grant R01-GM0325543 (C.B.), the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231 (C.B.),and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (C.B.).

Pressé, a statistical physicist, joined the IUPUI faculty earlier this year.

The School of Science at IUPUI is committed to excellence in teaching, research and service in the biological, physical, behavioral and mathematical sciences. The school is dedicated to being a leading resource for interdisciplinary research and science education in support of Indiana's effort to expand and diversify its economy. For more information, visit science.iupui.edu.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

First gene detected for most common form of mitral valve prolapse

2013-10-25
First gene detected for most common form of mitral valve prolapse Scientists also found that gene disrupts heart valve development & growth Research on the DNA of a large multi-generational family has provided a genetic clue that enabled scientists to ...

Study finds that paying people to become kidney donors could be cost-effective

2013-10-25
Study finds that paying people to become kidney donors could be cost-effective Even a small increase in donors would save money and prolong lives Washington, DC (October 24, 2013) — A strategy where living kidney donors are paid $10,000, with the assumption that ...

Hands-free ultrasound device with clot-busting drug safe for stroke patients

2013-10-25
Hands-free ultrasound device with clot-busting drug safe for stroke patients American Heart Association Rapid Access Journal Report A hands-free ultrasound device combined with a clot-busting drug was safe for ischemic stroke patients in a phase II pilot study, ...

Scientists solve mystery of odd patterns of oxygen in solar system's earliest rocks

2013-10-25
Scientists solve mystery of odd patterns of oxygen in solar system's earliest rocks Reaction replicates formation of first silicate dust; oxygen isotopes match mix seen in stony meteorites Cosmochemists have solved a long standing mystery in the formation ...

Increasing toxicity of algal blooms tied to nutrient enrichment and climate change

2013-10-25
Increasing toxicity of algal blooms tied to nutrient enrichment and climate change CORVALLIS, Ore. – Nutrient enrichment and climate change are posing yet another concern of growing importance: an apparent increase in the toxicity of some algal blooms in freshwater ...

Unique chemistry in hydrogen catalysts

2013-10-25
Unique chemistry in hydrogen catalysts Making hydrogen easily and cheaply is a dream goal for clean, sustainable energy. Bacteria have been doing exactly that for billions of years, and now chemists at the University of California, Davis, and Stanford University ...

Yeast, human stem cells drive discovery of new Parkinson's disease drug targets

2013-10-25
Yeast, human stem cells drive discovery of new Parkinson's disease drug targets CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (October 24, 2013) – Using a discovery platform whose components range from yeast cells to human stem cells, Whitehead Institute scientists have identified ...

A thermoelectric materials emulator

2013-10-25
A thermoelectric materials emulator Behavior of thermoelectric materials simulated Discovered in the 19th century, thermoelectric materials have the remarkable property that heating them creates a small electrical current. But enhancing this current to a level ...

Exercise during pregnancy improves vascular function of offspring into adulthood

2013-10-25
Exercise during pregnancy improves vascular function of offspring into adulthood Exercise during gestation has the potential to program vascular health in offspring into their adulthood, in particular significantly altering the vascular smooth muscle, shows a new study published ...

Persuading light to mix it up with matter

2013-10-25
Persuading light to mix it up with matter CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Researchers at MIT have succeeded in producing and measuring a coupling of photons and electrons on the surface of an unusual type of material called a topological insulator. This type of coupling ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Beyond ChatGPT: WVU researchers to study use and ethics of artificial intelligence across disciplines

Ultrasensitive test detects, serially monitors intact virus levels in patients with COVID-19

mRNA-activated blood clots could cushion the blow of osteoarthritis

Three rockets will ignite Poker Flat’s 2025 launch season

Jared M. Kutzin, DNP, MS, MPH, RN, named President of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare

PET probe images inflammation with high sensitivity and selectivity

Epilepsy patient samples offer unprecedented insights on brain ‘brakes’ linked to disorders

Your stroke risk might be higher if your parents divorced during your childhood

Life satisfaction measurement tool provides robust information across nations, genders, ages, languages

Adult children of divorced parents at higher risk of stroke

Anti-climate action groups tend to arise in countries with stronger climate change efforts

Some coral "walk" towards blue or white light, using rolling, sliding or pulsing movements to migrate, per experiments with free-living mushroom coral Cycloseris cyclolites

Discovery of the significance of birth in the maintenance of quiescent neural stem cells

Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the US

Bioluminescent cell imaging gets a glow-up

Float like a jellyfish: New coral mobility mechanisms uncovered

Severe weather and major power outages increasingly coincide across the U.S.

Who to vaccinate first? Penn engineers answer a life-or-death question with network theory

Research shows PTSD, anxiety may affect reproductive health of women firefighters

U of M Medical School research team receives $1.2M grant to study Tourette syndrome treatment

In the hunt for new and better enzymes, AI steps to the fore

Females have a 31% higher associated risk of developing long COVID, UT Health San Antonio-led RECOVER study shows

Final synthetic yeast chromosome unlocks new era in biotechnology

AI-powered prediction model enhances blood transfusion decision-making in ICU patients

MD Anderson Research Highlights for January 22, 2025

Scholastica announces integration with Crossmark by Crossref to expand its research integrity support

Could brain aging be mom’s fault? The X chromosome factor

Subterranean ‘islands’: strongholds in a potentially less turbulent world

Complete recombination map of the human-genome, a major step in genetics

Fighting experience plays key role in brain chemical’s control of male aggression

[Press-News.org] IUPUI physicist collaborates in new study of the cell's 'shredder'